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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (
hypothermia
)
17,327
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Gray wolves (Canis
lupus
) were immobilized with 0.5 mg/kg xylazine plus 7.5 micrograms/kg of either sufentanil (n = 8), etorphine (n = 8), or carfentanil (n = 2). Drug doses used in this study were selected to provide consistency for comparison and are not recommended doses for effective immobilization of wolves. Induction times were similar among groups (11.9 +/- 1.0 min). Thirty min after induction, wolves were given either 0.5 mg/kg naloxone hydrochloride plus 0.15 mg/kg yohimbine hydrochloride or saline only intravenously. Arousal times for wolves given naloxone and yohimbine (1.2 +/- 0.1 min) were shorter than wolves given saline (35.5 +/- 6.4 min). Respiratory rates were similar among the three drug groups (6.9 +/- 1.0 breaths/min). One animal given sufentanil then saline was found dead 108 min after induction. Presumptive diagnosis was renarcotization and
hypothermia
. Results indicated that sufentanil is an effective opioid immobilizing agent for gray wolves.
...
PMID:Immobilization of gray wolves (Canis lupus) with sufentanil citrate. 214 48
We describe an 18-year-old black woman with
systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
) who presented with an exacerbation of polymyositis and neuropsychiatric symptoms. After starting prednisone she became hypothermic for 5 days.
Hypothermia
associated with
SLE
has been described in only 3 patients.
...
PMID:Hypothermia and systemic lupus erythematosus. 235 81
Surgical intervention is generally accepted for acute type A dissection, but little is published regarding therapy for acute dissection of the transverse portion of the aortic arch, though involved in approximately 15% of cases. Often, surgical treatment is withheld if aortography suggests a primary tear in the aortic arch. Similarly, resection is limited to the ascending aorta despite intimal tears within the transverse portion of the arch. This work reports a 9-year experience with a policy of emergency resection for all acute aortic dissections involving the aortic arch. Intensive "antiimpulse" therapy is instituted and aortic angiograms are obtained. Type A dissections are resected under moderate
hypothermia
and, if the primary tear extends into the arch or is not found in the ascending aorta, the arch is explored during a brief period of deep
hypothermia
and circulatory arrest. If necessary, the arch is replaced during circulatory arrest, the patient's head is packed in ice, steroids are administered, and a barbiturate coma is induced. If arch replacement is anticipated preoperatively, surface cooling is also employed. Sixteen acute (up to 14 days) and three subacute (15 to 28 days) transverse arch dissections were treated in this manner between May 1979 and May 1988, with four (21%) hospital deaths (25%, acute; 0%, subacute). Mortality was related to left main coronary dissection with extensive myocardial infarction in two of our four cases, a third death was related to persistent seizures in a renal transplant patient requiring hemodialysis who had
lupus
cerebritis, and the fourth resulted from rupture of the descending aorta 15 days after arch replacement.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Urgent operation for acute transverse aortic arch dissection. 291 32
Thermoregulation involves a long term adaptation system with hormonal processes and an immediate regulation system by extrapyramidal tracts, sympathetic part of autonomic nervous system and cortical integration of body temperature changes. Both system are under control of a hypothalamic center. Prolonged accidental exposure to intense cold and myxoedematous coma are the best known etiologies of
hypothermia
. However milder and often misdiagnosed
hypothermia
can occur at home in patients without endocrinologic disease. In these cases,
hypothermia
is due to dysfunction of immediate thermregulation under neuronal control, especially somatomotor and autonomic system. We report four cases of
hypothermia
of this kind. Two patients had an inhibition of peripherical mechanisms of protecting against cold (cutaneous vasoconstriction, shivering) and had dampened perception of cold: one was 73, had diabetes mellitus and took different drugs, the other one suffered from systemic
lupus
with myelopathy. The two other patients probably had a disorder of the thermoregulation hypothalamic center: one had Wernicke's encephalopathy and the other multiple sclerosis. From these cases and a review of the literature, we describe the different etiologies of
hypothermia
and their pathophysiology.
...
PMID:[Hypothermia and the nervous system. Review of the literature apropos of 4 cases]. 876 Jun 89
Patients with multiple sclerosis sometimes show subthalamic lesions presenting syndrome of inappropriate secretion of ADH (SIADH),
hypothermia
, hyperprolactinemia, weight loss, and cachexia. Hyperprolactinemia also has been found in the patients with active
systemic lupus erythematosus
, because prolactin can be produced from human activated lymphocytes. We described a case of multiple sclerosis showing galactorrhea-amenorrhea syndrome with hyperprolactinemia. A 31-year-old woman showed a high level of prolactin in the serum (79.6 ng/ml) during remission stage 5 months after the onset of multiple sclerosis. She showed galactorrhea-amenorrhea syndrome 3 years later. She showed dysesthesia in her limbs, relapsing monoparesis, visual disturbance and Gd-enhanced plaques in Brain MRI for 6 years. She was admitted to our hospital on November 24, 1995. A neurological examination showed hyporeflexia of the upper extremities, hyperreflexia of the lower extremities, bilateral ankle clonus, truncal ataxia, and neurogenic bladder. Laboratory tests revealed increased level of serum prolactin, exaggerated secretion of serum prolactin after intravenous injection of 500 micrograms TRH, and marked suppression after oral administration of 2.5 mg bromocriptine. Brain MRI showed demyelinating lesions near the lateral ventricle, and cervical MRI (T2 image) showed high signal intensity lesions in the spinal cord from C2 to C5. In the previous case, galactorrhea-amenorrhea syndrome was found during the exacerbation stage of multiple sclerosis. Hyperprolactinemia may be caused from subthalamic lesions or by activated lymphocytes in multiple sclerosis. We considered that hyperprolactinemia and galactorrhea-amenorrhea syndrome in our patient might be caused from subthalamic lesions because lymphocytes were not activated during the remission stage of multiple sclerosis.
...
PMID:[A case of multiple sclerosis with galactorrhea-amenorrhea syndrome]. 936 74
Systemic lupus erythematosus
(SLE) is a prototypic autoimmune disease affecting various organ systems.
Hypothermia
is a rare manifestation of SLE. We experienced a case of SLE combined with
hypothermia
. A 36-year-old woman, who had been diagnosed as SLE 3 days before admission, admitted complaining of mental confusion. After admission, her body temperature, initially 36.1 degrees C, became 32.6 degrees C. Her core body temperature was less than 35.0 degrees C. Despite of warming with heating lamp and blankets, her core temperature did not reach 35.0 degrees C during 18 hours. Ten days later, her temperature exceeded 36.0 degrees C.
...
PMID:A case of hypothermia combined with systemic lupus erythematosus. 1141 5
Thrombosis is observed in several areas of medicine. Equilibrium between pro- and anticoagulant factors is required for maintaining blood flow. Tissue injury from multiple causes may induce coagulum formation mediated by coagulation pathway activation. Tissue factor (F III) + F VIIa interacts with both platelet and endothelial cell receptors. This coagulation model displays four stages: a) initiation, b) amplification, c) propagation and d) stabilization. Development of thrombosis is associated with either primary or hereditary and acquired factors. Primary thrombophilia is determined genetically by a hypercoagulative state shown by loss of natural anticoagulant activity, such as antithrombin III, C, S protein or procoagulant activity gaining resistance to activated C protein: factor V (Leiden), prothrombin and methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase mutations. Acquired thrombophilia mainly relates to an autoimmune condition such as the presence of anticardiolipin antibodies or
lupus
anticoagulant. Surgical procedures enhance mechanisms that predispose to thrombosis, e.g., acidosis,
hypothermia
, plasma expanders, extracorporeal circulation, duration of surgical procedure, and tissue manipulation. Adequate classification of the patient's thrombosis risk and adequate use of primary and secondary prophylactic recommendations in these groups of patients is necessary.
...
PMID:[Thrombophilia, autoimmunity, and perioperative thromboprophylaxis]. 1805 65
Rationally designed behavioral tests are important tools to assess the function of specific brain regions. The hippocampus is a crucial neural substrate for spatial cognition, and many studies have linked hippocampal dysfunction with defects on spatial learning and memory in neurological conditions ranging from Alzheimer's disease to autoimmune syndromes, such as neuropsychiatric
lupus
. While our understanding of hippocampal function, from the molecular to the system levels, has increased dramatically over the last decades, this effort has not yet translated into efficacious therapies for cognitive impairment. We think that the availability of highly validated behavioral paradigms to measure cognition in mouse models is likely to enhance the potential success of preclinical therapeutic modalities. Here, we present an extensive study of the paddling pool task (PPT), first reported by Deacon and Rawlins, in which mice learn to escape from shallow water through a peripheral exit in a circular arena dubbed the clockmaze. We show that the PPT provides highly reliable results when assaying spatial cognition in C57/BL6 mice (120 males, 40 females) and BALB/c mice (40 males, 90 females). Additionally, we develop a robust algorithm for the assessment of escape strategies with clearly quantifiable readouts, enabling fine-granular phenotyping. Notably, the use of spatial strategy increases linearly across trials in the PPT. In a separate cohort of mice, we apply muscimol injections to silence the dorsal CA1 region of the hippocampus and show that the use of the spatial strategy in the PPT relies on the integrity of the dorsal hippocampus. Additionally, we compare directly the PPT and the Morris water maze (MWM) task in C57/BL6 mice (20 males, 20 females) and BALB/c mice (20 males, 20 females) and we find that the PPT induces significantly lower anxiety, exhaustion and
hypothermia
than the MWM. We conclude that the PPT provides a robust assessment of spatial cognition in mice, which can be applied in conjunction with other tests, to facilitate hypothesis testing and drug development to combat cognitive impairment.
...
PMID:Large-Scale Validation of the Paddling Pool Task in the Clockmaze for Studying Hippocampus-Based Spatial Cognition in Mice. 3123 Nov 97